Forging Ahead - Embracing the Reconciliation Option for Reform

Michael Scally MD

Doctor of Medicine
10+ Year Member
Forging Ahead ? Embracing the ?Reconciliation? Option for Reform
Forging Ahead ? Embracing the “Reconciliation” Option for Reform | Health Care Reform Center
Posted by NEJM ? February 10th, 2010

Henry J. Aaron, Ph.D.

The course of health care reform in 2009 resembled the silent movie series ?The Perils of Pauline,? in which each episode began with a threat to the heroine?s life but ended with her salvation. Despite repeated near-death experiences, reform legislation passed both houses of Congress. After so many obstacles had been surmounted, the remaining task of reconciling the House and Senate bills seemed doable.

Then, a political earthquake hit. Republican Scott Brown won the Massachusetts senatorial seat that had been held for 47 years by the late Senator Edward M. Kennedy, thwarting the capacity of the remaining 57 Democrats and two independents to bring anything to a vote in the Senate over the united opposition of the 41 Republicans. The election also caused something approaching a panic attack among White House and congressional Democrats, who called variously for dropping health care reform, trying to pass one scaled-back bill or several smaller bills, moving slowly on doing anything, seeking compromise with Republicans on some (unspecified) new approach, or having the House pass the Senate bill subject to modifications, which both houses would pass separately, to make the Senate bill acceptable to the House. Passing the fixes in the last of these options hinged on using ?reconciliation,? a procedure that requires only a majority vote but that can be used only to implement instructions contained in the budget resolution relating to taxes or expenditures. Passage of the modifications would follow House approval of the Senate-passed bill.

The idea of using reconciliation has raised concern among some supporters of health care reform. They fear that reform opponents would consider the use of reconciliation high-handed. But in fact Congress created reconciliation procedures to deal with precisely this sort of situation ? its failure to implement provisions of the previous budget resolution. The 2009 budget resolution instructed both houses of Congress to enact health care reform. The House and the Senate have passed similar but not identical bills. Since both houses have acted but some work remains to be done to align the two bills, using reconciliation to implement the instructions in the budget resolution follows established congressional procedure.

Furthermore, coming from Republicans, objections to the use of reconciliation on procedural grounds seem more than a little insincere. A Republican president and a Republican Congress used reconciliation procedures in 2001 to enact tax cuts that were supported by fewer than 60 senators. The then-majority Republicans could use reconciliation only because they misrepresented the tax cuts as temporary although everyone understood they were intended to be permanent ? but permanent cuts would have required the support of 60 senators, which they did not have.

The more substantive objection to the use of reconciliation for passing health care reform derives from the fact that, according to polls, more Americans oppose than support what they think is in the reform bills. It is hardly surprising that people are nervous about health care reform. Most Americans are insured and are reasonably satisfied with their coverage. In principle, large-scale reform could upset current arrangements.

If public perceptions of the intended and expected effects of the current bills were accurate, democratically elected representatives might be bound to heed the concerns. Because the perceptions are inaccurate, reform supporters have a duty to do a better job of explaining what health care reform will do. When participants in focus groups are informed about the bills? actual provisions, their views become much more positive. The prevailing views have clearly been shaped by opponents? misrepresentations of the reform plans, which supporters have done little to rebut. Opponents have described as a ?government takeover? plans that would cause tens of millions of people to buy insurance from private companies. They have told people that a plan deemed by the Congressional Budget Office to be a deficit reducer is actually a budget buster. They have fostered the canard that end-of-life counseling would mean the creation of ?death panels? (a claim that PolitiFact.com labeled ?the lie of the year?). They have persuaded Americans that their insurance arrangements would be jeopardized by plans that would in fact leave most coverage untouched, add coverage for millions of Americans, and protect millions of others from cancellation of their coverage and from unaffordable rate increases in the event of serious illness.

Meanwhile, supporters have spent most of their time on seemingly endless debates with one another about specific legislative provisions ? whether to include a public option in the reform legislation, whether to have a single national insurance exchange or separate state exchanges, how to enforce a mandate that everyone carry insurance and how much to spend on subsidies to make that mandate acceptable, how to enforce a mandate on all but small employers to sponsor and pay for basic coverage for their workers, and scores of other complex and bewildering technical provisions.

Health care reformers in the administration and Congress have a powerful case to make and, on an issue of such enormous importance, a duty to make it. In addition to reminding Americans that reform will protect, not jeopardize, coverage by preventing insurance companies from canceling coverage or jacking up premiums for the sick, reform advocates should remind them that the proposed legislation will bring coverage to tens of millions of currently uninsured Americans and protect it for scores of millions of others. Reform advocates should explain the legislation?s legitimate promise of cost control and quality improvement.

President Barack Obama has announced a bipartisan meeting on moving the reform process forward. It is an opportunity for all sides to present ideas for improving the bills that already have been passed by both houses of Congress. If modifications are identified that will command the support of simple majorities in both houses, they should be adopted through reconciliation. Then the House should pass the Senate bill.

Other strategies, in my view, have no prospect of success. Abandoning the reform effort is the worst strategy of all ? not only for reform advocates, but for the nation. Reform advocates are already on record as supporting reform. Voters who oppose reform will not forget that fact come November, and those who support it will find little reason to make campaign contributions to or turn out to vote for lawmakers who were afraid to use large congressional majorities to implement legislation that would begin long-overdue efforts to extend coverage, slow the growth of spending, and improve the quality of care.

The start-from-scratch and piecemeal-legislation strategies are invitations to time-consuming failure. The Senate would need 60-vote majorities for every component of such reforms. To be sure, lawmakers could craft a different bill that would extend coverage to fewer people than the current bills do. But they could not institute serious insurance market reforms without assuring a balanced enrollee pool ? or assure such a pool without mandating coverage. Nor is it politically possible or ethically fair to mandate coverage without offering subsidies for low- and moderate-income people. And it is not possible to prevent those subsidies from increasing deficits without tax increases or spending cuts, which reform opponents won?t support and which would require 60 Senate votes. The call to start anew is naive at best. At worst, it is a disingenuous siren song, luring health care reformers into a political swamp.

Reformers? best choice is to embrace the democratic process and attempt to persuade voters that the current legislation is in the national interest. They have 10 months to succeed before the midterm elections.

If would-be reformers retreat in the face of current public opinion polls, they will be sent packing in November. Arguably, they will deserve to lose. If they stand up for their genuinely constructive legislation, they can prevail ? and will deserve to win.
 
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Re: Forging Ahead Embracing the Reconciliation Option for Reform

I would be all for Health care reform if it didn't sound so much as socialized welfare for the masses. Granted, most Medicaid recipients have better benefits then a pretty good percentage of regular insured people. I mean what better insurance could you have where you see a doctor and if he orders a test that isn't covered that patient cannot be billed for the balance. Hell, when I worked in a pharmacy these people (and I say it like that because most did not need to be on Medicaid) would object to paying a 50 cent copay for a months worth of medication. You know what I pay for a month of medication (IF it is on the list of approvalable drugs) $20! So why should I pay more as a working member of society as opposed to someone who can make it by as a professional freeloader on food stamps and Medicaid. And don't get me wrong, I am not making this comment towards people who actually need food stamps and Medicaid, just the hundreds of thousands who take advantage of the system and I have to pay for it while yet again, they contribute nothing at all.
So that's my rant. You want to fix Health care go ahead, but make it fare for everyone. Not just a system where freeloaders get more benefits. You need a job??? Someone is ALWAYS hiring! And if you don't have a job, you are not above the qualifications because if you were then you wouldn't be on unemployment! (yep, I'm sure that one struck a vein!) :D
 
Re: Forging Ahead Embracing the Reconciliation Option for Reform

I would be all for Health care reform if it didn't sound so much as socialized welfare for the masses. Granted, most Medicaid recipients have better benefits then a pretty good percentage of regular insured people. I mean what better insurance could you have where you see a doctor and if he orders a test that isn't covered that patient cannot be billed for the balance. Hell, when I worked in a pharmacy these people (and I say it like that because most did not need to be on Medicaid) would object to paying a 50 cent copay for a months worth of medication. You know what I pay for a month of medication (IF it is on the list of approvalable drugs) $20! So why should I pay more as a working member of society as opposed to someone who can make it by as a professional freeloader on food stamps and Medicaid. And don't get me wrong, I am not making this comment towards people who actually need food stamps and Medicaid, just the hundreds of thousands who take advantage of the system and I have to pay for it while yet again, they contribute nothing at all.
So that's my rant. You want to fix Health care go ahead, but make it fare for everyone. Not just a system where freeloaders get more benefits. You need a job??? Someone is ALWAYS hiring! And if you don't have a job, you are not above the qualifications because if you were then you wouldn't be on unemployment! (yep, I'm sure that one struck a vein!) :D

[:o)] so in other words i'll be keeping my medicaid n u can fight to keep ur co-pays. hey, at least u help keep up the shareholder value for the stockholders who own ur insurance company. ;)
 
Re: Forging Ahead Embracing the Reconciliation Option for Reform

Small Ideas Won’t Fix It
EDITORIAL
Editorial - Small Ideas Won’t Fix It - NYTimes.com

February 14, 2010


When Republican Congressional leaders come to the White House’s health care summit meeting on Feb. 25, don’t expect them to bring any big ideas with them. Instead, they will press President Obama to scrap his ambitious health care reforms and focus on modest proposals.

That may make political sense. Americans have certainly been spooked by all of the Republican hype about government takeovers.

But the small ideas the Republicans are championing would barely make a dent in the most critical problems threatening the health care system: the huge number of Americans without insurance and the ever-escalating costs of health care.

Let’s be clear, some of the Republican ideas are good ones — and many of those are already included in the Democratic reform bills.

Both parties would allow dependent children to remain on their parents’ group polices until age 26. They would also prohibit insurers from placing annual or lifetime caps on the amount they will pay; prohibit cancellation of policies after an individual becomes sick; speed the use of standardized, automated insurance forms to save administrative costs; promote wellness programs; and make a greater effort to root out waste and fraud.

While these are all worthwhile ideas, they are not enough to fix the broken health care system.

The most fundamental difference between the two parties is that the Republicans say it is too costly to cover all Americans. They oppose mandates requiring everyone to buy insurance and employers to provide it. And they resist any large expansion of the Medicaid program and new government subsidies to help the uninsured buy policies.

As a result, the Congressional Budget Office judged that a bill championed by House Republicans would leave some 17 percent of all legal non-elderly residents without coverage in 2019 — the same percentage as now. The Democratic bills passed by the House and the Senate would leave only 4 to 6 percent uninsured.

The Republicans also balk at many of the Democrats’ proposals for holding down medical costs — including comparative effectiveness research to help doctors understand which treatments work best and which don’t, and cuts in Medicare reimbursement formulas designed to push providers to greater productivity.

Instead, the Republicans focus on making insurance more affordable. Their strategies could indeed hold down premiums for the young and the healthy. But they are likely to drive up premiums for the older and the sicker.

That may also be good short-term politics — there are a lot more healthy people than chronically ill people — but it shortchanges those who most need help. And until the problem of rising medical costs is addressed, the government will never solve its deficit problem.

Here is a look at the main “fixes” contained in Republican reform bills. They primarily affect people who buy their own policies or work for small businesses, not the vast majority who get their insurance through larger employers.

INSURANCE IN ANY STATE The cost of insurance for individual buyers varies considerably by state. In New York, for example, the premiums are high because insurers are required by law to accept all applicants without regard to their health status and provide a wide array of benefits.

Under federal laws, health insurers can sell policies only to individuals in the states where they are licensed to do business. The Republican proposals would allow insurers to designate any state as their primary place of business and then sell policies to residents of any other state. Most insurers would probably choose a state with few requirements, enabling them to offer skimpy policies, shun the sickest applicants and keep premiums low.

The Congressional Budget Office expects that young and healthy individuals would flock to the lower-benefit/lower-premium states while the older and sicker would flock to the states where they are guaranteed coverage, causing premiums to rise even higher there.

The Republicans are also calling for federal bonus payments to states that reduce the number of uninsured or states where insurers lower their average premiums for individual and small group insurance. The idea has some merit as an add-on to more comprehensive national reforms, but leaving the states to solve such major problems is unlikely to have much success.

ASSOCIATION HEALTH PLANS The Republicans would allow individuals or small businesses to buy group coverage through various business, professional or civic associations. The notion, a good one, is that a broader pool should enable the group to get lower rates than an individual could. The downside is that these associations could also tailor their policies to attract the healthy, leaving the sicker out of luck or in small group coverage where they would drive up the average premiums.

Malpractice reforms The Republicans put great stock in the idea that malpractice litigation drives up medical costs — forcing doctors to pay high premiums for malpractice insurance and leading many doctors to practice overly defensive medicine, performing needless tests or procedures.

They are right, but the effect is far smaller than their rhetoric implies.

The Congressional Budget Office concluded that an array of common proposals to clamp down on malpractice litigation might reduce national premiums for malpractice policies by 10 percent and lead to a “slight reduction” in tests and procedures. All told, national health spending would decline by half a percent, or $11 billion a year, a sum well worth saving but hardly a cure.

Malpractice reform is an area where the two parties could make progress. The Democrats, in their Senate bill, would provide grants to encourage states to experiment, such as having impartial experts render an initial judgment on malpractice claims or establishing special malpractice courts with highly trained judges to sift through the evidence. The Democrats could go further, perhaps by offering greater protection to doctors who follow best-practice guidelines.

Republicans, however, are bent on capping damages for pain and suffering at $250,000 and generally want punitive damages capped at $500,000. That seems much too little for a badly injured patient.

HEALTH SAVINGS ACCOUNTS Health savings accounts allow people to deposit tax-deductible dollars to pay their routine medical expenses. Republicans want to expand these accounts so that the money can also be used to pay insurance premiums.

That seems reasonable, but the people who would most benefit are those in high-income brackets. The proposal would be of little use to people who couldn’t afford to set money aside for future health care bills.

HIGH-RISK POOLS Republicans reject the Democrats’ proposal to require insurers to accept all applicants, regardless of pre-existing conditions. Instead they are proposing that the federal government provide grants to states to establish and expand so-called high-risk pools that cover people who cannot find affordable insurance on the commercial market.

Such pools exist in some 35 states. They currently insure only about 200,000 people and often charge premiums that many people find unaffordable, even with the help of modest subsidies. Unless they are granted substantially more money than the Republicans are likely to commit, these pools cannot possibly meet the need. The Democrats would enhance high-risk pools, but only as a stop-gap measure until their comprehensive reforms take force in 2014.

Mr. Obama is right to challenge the Republicans to come up with their own health care reform plans. And if real progress can be made at this month’s meeting, the whole country will benefit. What Mr. Obama should not do is give up on his goal of covering as many Americans as possible or his goal of reining in spiraling health care costs. That is what he promised, and it is what the country needs.


This editorial is a part of a comprehensive examination of the debate over health care reform. You can read all of these editorials at: http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/opinion/editorials/select-health-care-editorials/index.html
 
Obama Details Plan to Expand Health Care to Uninsured
Obama Details Plan to Expand Health Care to Uninsured - NYTimes.com

February 23, 2010
By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG and DAVID M. HERSZENHORN

WASHINGTON — President Obama on Monday laid out for the first time a detailed legislative proposal for overhauling health care. His plan sticks largely to the approach passed by the Senate with unified Democratic support, but it makes concessions to the House version, which was more expensive and would have covered more people.

Mr. Obama’s proposal is the opening act to a week of high drama around health care that will culminate on Thursday, when the president convenes Democrats and Republicans at an all-day televised health care “summit” at Blair House. The White House is hoping the session can jump start the stalled health bill.

“We view this as the opening bid for the health meeting,” Dan Pfeiffer, Mr. Obama’s communications director, told reporters Monday morning, adding, “We took our best shot at bridging the differences.”

The bill is intended to achieve Mr. Obama’s broad goals of expanding coverage to the uninsured while driving down health premiums and imposing what the White House calls “common sense rules of the road” for insurers, including ending the unpopular practice of discriminating against people with pre-existing conditions. The measure is posted on the White House Web site.

The White House projects that the bill would extend coverage to 31 million people who are currently uninsured, at a cost over 10 years of $950 billion — more than the $871 billion the Senate would have spent, but less than the $1.05 trillion for the version passed by the House. The administration estimates that its plan would reduce the federal deficit by $100 billion over the next 10 years — and about $1 trillion over the second decade — by cutting spending and reining in waste and fraud.

But the measure has not yet been evaluated by the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office, and White House officials said they were open to adjusting it if it cost substantially more than they have estimated.

The proposal would provide more money to help cash-strapped states pay for Medicaid over the next four years and eliminate the unpopular “donut hole” coverage gap in the Medicare prescription drug program.

In many respects, Mr. Obama’s measure looks much like the version the Senate passed on Christmas Eve — and indeed, senior White House officials acknowledged on a morning conference call that they had used the Senate bill as a template. But there are several critical differences that appear designed to appeal to House Democrats, who have voiced deep concerns about the Senate measure and its effects on the middle class.

To begin with, Mr. Obama would eliminate a controversial special deal for Nebraska — widely derided by Republicans as the “cornhusker kickback” — that called for the federal government to pay the full cost of a Medicaid expansion for that state. Instead, the White House would help all states absorb the cost of the Medicaid expansion from 2014, when it begins, until 2017.

And while the president adopts the Senate’s proposed excise tax on high-cost, employer sponsored insurance plans, Mr. Obama makes some crucial adjustments based on an agreement reached in January with organized labor leaders, while also trying to avoid the appearance of special treatment for unions. Most crucially, the president would delay imposing the tax until 2018 for all policies, not just for health benefits provided through collectively-bargained union contracts.

One unanswered question is whether the White House will attempt to push the bill through Congress using the complicated parliamentary maneuver known as “reconciliation,” ordinarily reserved for budget bills. Now that Democrats have lost their 60-vote supermajority in the Senate, some argue in favor of using reconciliation, which requires only a simple majority to pass a bill, but sharply restricts a bill’s language to provisions that have a direct impact on federal spending and revenues.

Mr. Pfeiffer did not rule it out. “The president expects and believes the American people deserve an up or down vote on health reform,” he said, “and our proposal is designed to give ourselves maximum flexibility to insure that, if the opposition decides to take the extraordinary step of filibustering health reform.”

In one sense, the release of the bill marks an extraordinary reversal for a president who has long said he would leave legislating to the legislators. Mr. Obama made clear from the outset of the health care debate that he would not follow the footsteps of the last Democratic president, Bill Clinton, who presented Congress with a sweeping health care proposal — only to see it fall flat on Capitol Hill.

Instead, Mr. Obama left it to Congress to produce its own measure. But after months of work, the House and Senate have been unable to close the gap between their bills. So the president, who had promised to post a Democratic measure on the Internet 72 hours in advance of Thursday’s health care meeting, was forced to take matters into his own hands.

Like the Senate version, Mr. Obama’s bill does not include a so-called public option, a government-backed insurance plan to compete with the private sector.

And the bill offers the Senate’s less restrictive language on abortion; it does not include the so-called “Stupak amendment,” which would bar insurers from offering abortion coverage to anyone buying a policy with a federal subsidy. The absence of the Stupak provision, named for Representative Bart Stupak, the conservative Michigan Democrat, could complicate matters for Mr. Obama in the House, where conservatives, led by Mr. Stupak, are adamant that the provision be included.

Mr. Obama largely adopted the Senate’s approach to paying for the legislation, including a proposed increase in the Medicare payroll tax for individuals earning more than $200,000 a year and for couples earning more than $250,000.

He opted for the Senate’s proposal to create state-based insurance exchanges, or marketplaces, rather than a single national exchange as proposed by the House. Many House Democrats worry that state exchanges would create uneven results by allowing states with lax insurance regulations to continue a hands-off approach.

And Mr. Obama adopted the Senate’s proposal to set a uniform eligibility threshold for Medicaid at 133 percent of the federal poverty level. The House had proposed setting eligibility at 150 percent of the poverty level.

House Democratic leaders, including Speaker Nancy Pelosi, had expressed serious concerns that, under the Senate bill, the subsidies provided to help moderate-income Americans afford private insurance would not be sufficient to make coverage affordable.

The Senate had provided somewhat less generous subsidies than the House for individuals and families earning below 300 percent of the federal poverty level or rough $66,150 for a family of four, while the House bill had been less generous to those earning between $66,150 and $88,200.

Mr. Obama generally favored the Senate’s approach, but made a stab at compromise by proposing larger federal subsidies than the Senate bill did for Americans in two income categories — those earning between 133 percent and 200 percent of the poverty level, or roughly $33, 075 to $44,100 for a family of four, and those earning between 300 and 400 percent of the poverty level, or $66,150 to $88,200 for a family of four.

Still, some rank-and-file lawmakers are likely to raise concerns that working-class families will still find it difficult to afford health benefits.

Under the president’s plan, a family earning about $88,000 a year would pay no more than 9.5 percent of income toward annual health insurance premiums, or about $8,380, not including out-of-pocket costs, such as co-payments or deductibles.

Under the Senate bill, such a family could have paid $8,643 a year in premiums and under the House bill as much as $10,584 a year.

Under the president’s plan, a family earning $22,050 would have to pay $441 in annual premium costs compare to $331 under the House bill. And a family earning $33,100 would have to pay up to $1,324 a year in premiums under Mr. Obama’s plan, compared to a maximum of $993 under the House bill.
 

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Re: Forging Ahead ? Embracing the ?Reconciliation? Option for Reform

As Obama Unveils Health Reform Plan, GOP Cries Foul.

Media coverage of President Obama's healthcare proposal (which included reports on all three network newscasts) generally gives it little chance of becoming law. The plan was swiftly confronted with GOP charges that it amounts to a "government takeover" that "slashes Medicare for our seniors," while Democrats are described a front page New York Times (2/23, A1, Stolberg, Herszenhorn - Obama’s Health Bill Plan Largely Follows Senate Version - NYTimes.com) story as taking "a wait-and-see attitude." Obama, the AP (2/23, Alonso-Zaldivar, Werner - http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100223/ap_on_bi_ge/us_health_care_overhaul;_ylt=Auk3UDoZTYBR6D2JtfyGAtRp24cA;_ylu=X3oDMTJ0dDl0NTBvBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTAwMjIzL3VzX2hlYWx0aF9jYXJlX292ZXJoYXVsBHBvcwM0BHNlYwN5bl9wYWdpbmF0ZV9zdW1tYXJ5X2xpc3QEc2xrA291dGxvb2tub2JyaQ--) reports, "knows his chances aren't looking...promising," and "realistically, he's just hoping to win a big enough slice to silence the talk of a failing presidency."

While the Wall Street Journal (2/23, Meckler - Obama's Health Plan Adds $75 Billion to Senate Bill - WSJ.com) notes that the plan would add about $75 billion to the cost of the measure passed by the Senate, the CBS Evening News (2/22, lead story, 1:30, Couric), which led with the story, reported that "this plan is $200 billion more than the existing Senate version," and that it "will not be an easy sell." CBS (Reid) added that "the White House claims they're going to pay for that $200 billion mostly with increases in taxes on the wealthy. But it will be a tough sell and that's not the only hurdle in the President's new plan. He's also proposing a brand new federal board called the Health Insurance Rate Authority and he wants to give the Federal government the power to block insurance companies from unreasonable rate increases."

USA Today (2/23, Fritze - Obama's health care bill revision seeks Dem unity - USATODAY.com) reports that the plan "includes several changes Obama hopes will ease friction among Democrats that has slowed progress on the effort for weeks." On its front page, the Washington Post (2/23, A1, MacGillis, Goldstein - washingtonpost.com) reports that "Obama's proposal takes the more modest Senate bill as his basic framework. But, in what is perhaps his proposal's most notable feature, he scales back the Senate bill's main revenue source, a tax on high-cost insurance that he has strongly supported. Instead, he would impose a new tax on the unearned income of the wealthy."

The Los Angeles Times (2/23, Levey - Obama lays out goals on healthcare - latimes.com) says that the plan's cost "would be around $950 billion over the next decade, offset by a mix of new taxes and cuts in federal Medicare spending." Politico (2/23, Brown, O'Connor - New health care plan, but with the same old problems - Carrie Budoff Brown and Patrick O'Connor - POLITICO.com), and the Washington Times (2/23, Haberkorn - Obama releases $1 trillion health care bill - Washington Times), Bloomberg News (2/23, Donmoyer, Gaouette - Obama Endorses Medicare Tax, More Drugmaker Fees (Update4) - Bloomberg.com) also cover the story.
 
Re: Forging Ahead ? Embracing the ?Reconciliation? Option for Reform

Bust the Health Care Trusts
Op-Ed Contributor - Bust the Health Care Trusts - NYTimes.com

February 24, 2010
By ROBERT B. REICH
Berkeley, Calif.

MY health insurer here in California is Anthem Blue Cross. So far, my group policy hasn’t been affected by Anthem’s planned rate increase of as much as 39 percent for its customers with individual policies — but the trend worries me, as it should everyone. Rates are soaring all over the country. Insurers have been seeking to raise premiums 24 percent in Connecticut, 23 percent in Maine, 20 percent in Oregon and a wallet-popping 56 percent in Michigan. How can insurers raise prices as much as they want without fear of losing customers?

Astonishingly, the health insurance industry is exempt from federal antitrust laws, which is why a handful of insurers have become so dominant in their markets that their customers simply have nowhere else to go. But that protection could soon end: President Obama on Tuesday announced his support of a House bill that would repeal health insurers’ antitrust exemption, and Speaker Nancy Pelosi signaled that she would put it toward an immediate vote.

This is promising news. Forcing insurers to compete for our business would do at least as much good as the president’s proposal to give the federal government, working with the states, the power to deny or roll back excessive premiums. The fact is that half of the states already have the power to approve rates and they don’t seem to be holding insurers back much.

Health insurers like Anthem claim they have to raise rates (as well as co-payments and deductibles) because of the economic downturn. Employers are reducing coverage and cutting payrolls. As a result, more people are buying individual policies, but they tend to be older and sicker. Younger and healthier Americans are simply going without insurance, and thus not subsidizing their costlier fellow policy-holders.

This can’t be the whole story, because big health insurers are making boatloads of money. America’s five largest health insurers made a total profit of $12.2 billion last year; that was 56 percent higher than in 2008, according to a report from Health Care for America Now.

It’s not as if health insurers have been inventing jazzy software or making jet airplanes. Basically, they just collect money from employers and individuals and give the money to providers. In most markets, consumers wouldn’t pay this much for so little. We’d find a competitor that charged less and delivered more. What’s stopping us? Not enough choice.

More than 90 percent of insurance markets in more than 300 metropolitan areas are “highly concentrated,” as defined by the Federal Trade Commission, according to the American Medical Association. A 2008 survey by the Government Accountability Office found the five largest providers of small group insurance controlled 75 percent or more of the market in 34 states, and 90 percent or more in 23 of those states, a significant increase in concentration since the G.A.O.’s 2002 survey.

Anthem’s parent is WellPoint, one of the largest publicly traded health insurers in America, which runs Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans in 14 states and Unicare plans in several others. WellPoint, through Anthem, is the largest for-profit health insurer here in California, as it is in Maine, where it controls 78 percent of the market. In Missouri, WellPoint owns 68 percent of the market; in its home state, Indiana, 60 percent. With 35 million customers, WellPoint counts one out of every nine Americans as a member of one of its plans.

Antitrust laws are supposed to prevent this kind of market power. So why are giant health insurers like WellPoint exempt? Chalk it up to an anomaly that began seven decades ago in the quaint old world of regional, nonprofit Blues. They were created in part by hospitals to spread the costs of expensive new equipment and facilities over many policy holders. Collaboration was the point, not competition. The 1945 McCarran-Ferguson Act made it official, exempting insurers from antitrust scrutiny and giving states the power to regulate them, although not necessarily any power to regulate rates.

The system worked fairly well until about two decades ago when insurers began morphing into publicly held, for-profit cash machines. A new breed of medical entrepreneur saw opportunities to profit from a rapidly aging population eager to get every new drug and technology that might extend their lives, and a government committed to doling out hundreds of billions of dollars in Medicare and Medicaid.

With size has come not only market power but political clout. Big for-profit insurers deploy enough campaign money and lobbyists to get their way with state legislators and insurance commissioners. A proposal last year to allow California’s Department of Insurance to regulate rates, for example, died in committee. These companies have even been known to press states to limit how many other health insurers they license.

And when they can’t get their way, insurers go to court. In Maine — one state that aggressively regulates rates — WellPoint’s Anthem subsidiary has sued the insurance superintendent for reducing its requested rate increase.

Political clout can be especially advantageous at the federal level, as the big Wall Street banks have so brazenly demonstrated. Over the past two and a half years, WellPoint’s employees and associates have contributed more than $922,000 to federal political campaigns, and the company has spent $7.8 million lobbying Washington policymakers, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. It should not be surprising that WellPoint was one of the leading opponents of the public insurance option, which would have subjected it to competition even where it had sewn up the market.

Antitrust is no substitute for broader health care reform, but it’s an important prerequisite. If a handful of giant health insurers are allowed to dominate the industry, many of the other aspects of reform (establishing insurance exchanges, requiring people to have insurance, even allowing consumers to buy insurance across state lines) won’t bring down the price of insurance.

Regardless of what happens at the White House’s health care meeting on Thursday, we’ve got to make sure health insurers compete for every one of our dollars. First chance I get I’m going to find another health insurer here in California — unless Anthem has such a lock on the market I can’t find a better deal.

Robert B. Reich, a professor of public policy at the University of California, Berkeley, and a secretary of labor under President Bill Clinton, is the author of “Supercapitalism.”
 
Re: Forging Ahead ? Embracing the ?Reconciliation? Option for Reform

House Approves Bill Stripping Health Insurers Of Antitrust Exemption.

The Washington Post (2/25, Pershing, Bacon - http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/02/24/AR2010022402258.html) reports that in "one of two legislative victories that showcased a new Democratic strategy of winning Republican support by advancing popular measures" on Wednesday, the House passed a measure 406-19 "aimed at repealing the health-insurance industry's decades-old antitrust exemption." The second victory the Post notes is the approval of a $15 billion jobs bill in the Senate.

Focusing on the "overwhelming" approval of the antitrust bill, CNN (2/25 - http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/02/24/health.antitrust/) reports that "liberal Democrats have said a repeal would help inject competition into the healthcare industry while reducing consumer costs." The 19 votes against were Republican. The Hill's (2/24, Fabian -http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/83493-house-overwhelmingly-passes-bill-eliminating-anti-trust-exemption-for-health-insurers) Blog Briefing Room also reported that the bill passed "overwhelmingly."

CQ Today (2/24, Ethridge) noted that "Democratic aides said the bill faces a possible filibuster threat in the Senate, although Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada supported similar legislation last year."

The Politico (2/24 - http://www.politico.com/livepulse/0210/A_rare_bipartisan_breakthrough.html) "Live Pulse" blog called the vote "a rare bipartisan achievement," reporting that "the measure was the first installment of Speaker Nancy Pelosi's dual-track strategy for passing smaller healthcare measures ahead of the Democrats' more sweeping bill. If party leaders fail to approve their bigger bill, Pelosi could revive this small-ball approach to make many of the changes they're seeking in the historic healthcare package." Reuters (2/25, Bartz - UPDATE 1-US House slaps antitrust law on health insurers | Reuters) and CongressDaily (2/25 - http://www.nationaljournal.com/congressdaily/coa_20100225_6767.php?) also cover the story.
 
Re: Forging Ahead ? Embracing the ?Reconciliation? Option for Reform

Report Contends Competition In Health-Insurance Industry Is Vanishing.

The Wall Street Journal (2/26, Johnson - Race to Pin Blame for High Health-Care Costs - WSJ.com) reports that doctors and insurers are blaming the problem of increasing healthcare costs in the US on one another and say that proposed health reform legislation will not solve the problem. This week, a report by the American Medical Association said that insurance industry consolidation has created markets in many places in which only one or two health insurance plans dominate, limiting competition that would otherwise help keep costs down.

HealthDay (2/25, Preidt - http://healthday.com/Article.asp?AID=636365) reported that the AMA's report, called Competition in Health Insurance: A Comprehensive Study of US Markets, examined "data from 43 states and 313 metropolitan markets," finding that "in 24 of the states, the two largest insurers had a combined market share of 70 percent or more."

MedPage Today (2/25, Gever - Medical News: AMA Blasts Insurer Consolidation - in Public Health & Policy, Health Policy from MedPage Today) reported that the AMA report, which "analyzed data on HMO and PPO enrollments nationwide," asked "state and federal regulators to take a hard look at future mergers among health insurers and also to 'retrospectively assess the anticompetitive effects of mergers that have already been consummated.'"
 
White House Healthcare Summit Said To Set Stage For Democrats-Only Bill.

Coverage of yesterday's White House summit (44 - Health care summit: Transcripts from every speaker) on healthcare reform (including the lead stories on all three networks) tends to highlight partisan sniping and broad policy disagreements. Ultimately, most analysts agree that yesterday's failure to reach a bipartisan deal sets the stage for Democrats to enact their bill through the tactic known as "reconciliation." The AP's Ron Fournier (2/26 - washingtonpost.com), for example, says that "from its conception, Thursday's healthcare 'summit' was destined to be little more than a stage where Democrats and Republicans would recite their lines and further their political agendas." Thus Obama's was "to cast the Republicans as obstructionists," because he "hopes to ram his proposal past a GOP filibuster." And by "that narrow and cynical scale, the summit was a success." Along similar lines, on the CBS Evening News (2/25, story 3, 1:00, Couric), reporter Chip Reid was asked whether Obama accomplished "what he needed to do" at the summit. Reid said, "He really did. ... What he really wanted to do was convince the American people...and, wavering Democrats in Congress, that the Republicans are the party of no," and that "he now has no choice but to move ahead with Democrats alone."

Typical of much of the print coverage is the report in today's Los Angeles Times (2/26, Levey, Hook - Healthcare summit reveals chasm between parties - latimes.com), which describes the situation thus, "Facing unbending Republican opposition to a healthcare overhaul...Obama confronted a stark reality Thursday as his televised summit ended: If he and his Democratic allies in Congress want to reshape the nation's healthcare system, they will have to do it by themselves."

Likewise, describing the session as "sometimes testy," McClatchy (2/26, Thomma, Lightman - Health summit leaves Obama, Democrats on their own | McClatchy) reports, "With Republicans apparently unmoved by a day-long faceoff on live TV...Obama and Democrats in Congress now face the test of whether they can overhaul the nation's healthcare system by themselves."

The AP (2/26, Babington - http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100226/ap_on_bi_ge/us_health_care_overhaul;_ylt=AhH.IGba2amgFGsnwqzeo5Vp24cA;_ylu=X3oDMTJ0dmdvZGtjBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTAwMjI2L3VzX2hlYWx0aF9jYXJlX292ZXJoYXVsBHBvcwMxBHNlYwN5bl9wYWdpbmF0ZV9zdW1tYXJ5X2xpc3QEc2xrA25vYWNjb3JkYXRoZQ--) also refers to an "often-testy...debate" which cemented "the widely held view that a meaningful bipartisan healthcare bill is not possible as time grows short in this election year," and the New York Times (2/26, Stolberg, Pear - President Urges Focus on Common Ground - NYTimes.com) reports, "By day's end, it seemed clear that the all-day televised session might even have pushed the parties even farther apart," and "Democrats were talking openly about pushing it through Congress on a simple majority vote using a controversial parliamentary maneuver known as reconciliation." The summit, says USA Today (2/26, Page - Analysis: Common ground at health summit stays barren - USATODAY.com), was "less conversation than illustration: A stark depiction of a gulf between the Democrats and Republicans."

Politico (2/26, Allen - Exclusive: What happens next in health care - Mike Allen - POLITICO.com) cites "a Democratic official" who said before the summit that it was "expected to 'give a face to gridlock,'" and NBC Nightly News (2/25, lead story, 3:25, Guthrie) said that with "no major breakthroughs, the President hinted at the close of the session he's looking to Democrats now to go forward -- and the voters will have the final verdict on what they do." The CBS Evening News (2/25, lead story, 3:15, Couric) reported that the summit "was less negotiating than speech-making," and also noted that at its end, the President "strongly" suggested "Democrats are ready to go it alone." The decision to move with Democratic support alone, says the Washington Post (2/26, A1, Murray, Kornblut - washingtonpost.com), was Obama's "clear message" yesterday. The Post adds that "Republicans often used reconciliation in recent years when they controlled the Senate, but GOP leaders now cite the procedure as evidence that Democrats are prepared to manipulate Senate rules to muscle their bill through despite public opinion." AFP (2/26, Collinson - http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100225/pl_afp/uspoliticsobamahealth_20100226000312;_ylt=AslRgCG8EqB0Y8anw274YiisOrgF;_ylu=X3oDMTJzdjNlM2MyBGFzc2V0A2FmcC8yMDEwMDIyNS91c3BvbGl0aWNzb2JhbWFoZWFsdGgEcG9zAzEEc2VjA3luX3BhZ2luYXRlX3N1bW1hcnlfbGlzdARzbGsDb2JhbWFoZWFsdGhz), the Wall Street Journal (2/26, Meckler, Adamy - Partisan Divides Continue to Cloud Summit - WSJ.com), The Hill (2/26, Youngman, Young - Obama eyes Democrats-only endgame at healthcare summit - TheHill.com), Bloomberg News (2/26, Jensen, Dodge, Runningen - Obama Says Health-Care Plan Can’t Wait Another Year (Correct) - Bloomberg.com), and the Christian Science Monitor (2/26, Feldmann - Obama healthcare summit opens: bipartisanship scarce, so far / The Christian Science Monitor - CSMonitor.com) also cover the summit.
 
The Cost of Doing Nothing on Health Care
The Cost of Doing Nothing on Health Care - NYTimes.com

February 26, 2010

By REED ABELSON

“Hands off my health care,” goes one strain of populist sentiment.

But what if?

Suppose Congress and President Obama fail to overhaul the system now, or just tinker around the edges, or start over, as the Republicans propose — despite the Democrats’ latest and possibly last big push that began last week at a marathon televised forum in Washington.

Then “my health care” stays the same, right?

Far from it, health policy analysts and economists of nearly every ideological persuasion agree. The unrelenting rise in medical costs is likely to wreak havoc within the system and beyond it, and pretty much everyone will be affected, directly or indirectly.

“People think if we do nothing, we will have what we have now,” said Karen Davis, the president of the Commonwealth Fund, a nonprofit health care research group in New York. “In fact, what we will have is a substantial deterioration in what we have.”

Nearly every mainstream analysis calls for medical costs to continue to climb over the next decade, outpacing the growth in the overall economy and certainly increasing faster than the average paycheck. Those higher costs will translate into higher premiums, which will mean fewer individuals and businesses will be able to afford insurance coverage. More of everyone’s dollar will go to health care, and government programs like Medicare and Medicaid will struggle to find the money to operate.

Policy makers, in the end, may be forced to address the issue.

“It will break all of our banks if we do nothing,” said Peter V. Lee, who oversees national health policy for the Pacific Business Group on Health, which represents employers that offer coverage to workers. “It is a course that is literally bankrupting the federal government and businesses and individuals across the country.”

Even those families that enjoy generous insurance now are likely to see the cost of those benefits escalate. The typical price of family coverage now runs about $13,000 a year, but premiums are expected to nearly double, to $24,000, by 2020, according to the Commonwealth Fund. That equals nearly a quarter of the median family income today.

While some employers will continue to contribute the lion’s share of those premiums, there will be less money for employees in the form of raises or bonuses.

“It’s also cramping our economic growth,” said Frank McArdle, a consultant with Hewitt Associates, which advises large employers and reported on the need for change for the Business Roundtable, an association of C.E.O.’s at major companies. Spending so much on health care is “really a waste of people’s money,” Mr. McArdle said.

The higher premiums will also persuade more businesses, especially smaller ones, to decide not to offer insurance. More people who buy coverage on their own or are asked to pay a large share of premiums will find the price too high. It doesn’t take too many 39-percent increases, like the recent one proposed in California that has garnered so much attention, to put insurance out of reach.

“We have an affordability problem that is moving up through the middle class now,” said Paul B. Ginsburg, the president of the Center for Studying Health System Change, a nonprofit Washington research group.

While estimates vary, the number of people without insurance is expected to increase by more than a million a year, said Ron Pollack, the executive director of Families USA, a Washington consumer advocacy group that favors the Democrats’ approach. The Urban Institute, for example, predicts that the number of uninsured individuals will increase from about 49 million today to between 57 million and 66 million by 2019. The Democrats’ plan is expected to cover as many as 30 million individuals who now are uninsured.

There will be a cost in lives, too. Mr. Pollack’s organization estimates that as many as 275,000 people will die prematurely over the next 10 years because they do not have insurance. Even people with insurance will find their coverage providing much less protection from financial catastrophe than it does now. Individuals will pay significantly more in deductibles and co-payments, for example. “More and more families will experience huge debts and bankruptcies,” Mr. Pollack said.

Federal and state governments will also feel the squeeze. Medicare, the federal program for the elderly, is already the subject of much hand-wringing as its spending balloons. Medicaid, a joint program of the federal government and the states, is already struggling as states try to balance budgets hit hard by the economic downturn. Many states may be forced to cut benefits sharply as well as reduce financing for community health centers and state hospitals that serve the poor.

“I think we’ll just see the decline of public services,” said John Holahan, the director of the Health Policy Center at the Urban Institute.

Exactly how politicians, or anyone else, will react to the increasing pressures on the system is anyone’s guess. If the system actually collapses, could there be a movement to adopt a government-run system, something like Medicare for all, where the whole health care system would be much more heavily regulated?

Or maybe employers would take up the effort to figure out a better way of providing coverage.

The states may also step up their role. Some may try to follow the lead of Massachusetts, which overhauled its own insurance market for individuals and small businesses, while others may try a series of regulatory fixes. A state senator in New Hampshire, for example, recently introduced legislation that regulates hospital prices in a fashion similar to an approach favored in Maryland.

What seems unlikely, say policy analysts, is that Congress would try to pass anything nearly as ambitious as the bills that went through the House and Senate last year.

“If we fail this time, you’re not going to get this Congress to take this up on a big scale,” said Len Nichols, a health policy analyst at George Mason University who says he thinks the Democrats should go ahead and pass legislation.

But few policy analysts think Congress can afford to do absolutely nothing. Lawmakers are instead likely to try a series of smaller fixes, said Stuart Butler, a health policy analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a research group that favors market solutions over a larger government role.

After President Bill Clinton failed to get Congress to pass his health care bill in 1994, Republicans, who then had substantial victories in the House and Senate, worked with him to pass legislation like the health care privacy bill, a children’s health insurance program and the Balanced Budget Act, which contained significant changes to the Medicare program. Under President George W. Bush, the Republicans went on to pass a drug benefit under Medicare. “In the space of less than 10 years, you have several major bills,” Mr. Butler said.

If nothing passes now, Mr. Butler says he thinks Congress will tackle narrower areas, like insurance regulation, to make it easier for people with pre-existing medical conditions to find coverage, or maybe it will try another expansion of Medicaid or the children’s program.

But President Obama clearly prefers passage of a broader bill. In wrapping up Thursday’s session with lawmakers, he and other Democrats warned that an incremental approach was likely to provide too little relief to the people already feeling the effects of a broken system. “It turns out that baby steps don’t get you to the place that people need to go,” he said.

And even some people without a partisan point to make argue that the series of bills passed in the last 15 years have not made enough of a dent in slowing down medical costs. “We’ve had a lot of incremental reforms already,” said Mr. McArdle, the Hewitt consultant.

And many argue that putting off the inevitable has an additional cost. The Commonwealth Fund estimates that the nation would be spending hundreds of billions of dollars less than it does today if any of the health care legislation proposed by previous administrations had been enacted, assuming that they reduced costs by about 1.5 percentage points. If President Nixon’s plan had passed, the United States might be spending a trillion dollars a year less than it does now, and President Clinton’s plan would have reduced spending by some $500 billion a year.

“It makes a huge difference over a long period of time,” said Ms. Davis of the Commonwealth Fund.
 
March 7, 2010
EDITORIAL
If Reform Fails
Editorial - If Reform Fails - NYTimes.com

As the fierce debate on President Obama’s plan for health care reform comes to a head, Americans should be thinking carefully about what happens if Congress fails to enact legislation.

Are they really satisfied with the status quo? And is the status quo really sustainable?

Here are some basic facts Americans need to know as Congress decides whether to approve comprehensive reform or continue with what we have:

HOW REFORM WOULD WORK: Let’s be clear, the changes Mr. Obama and Democratic leaders in Congress are proposing are significant. But, despite what the critics charge, this is not a government takeover. And the program is not only fully paid for, it should actually reduce the deficit over the next two decades.

Under the new system, all people would be required to have health insurance or pay a penalty. If you are poor or middle class you would also get significant help through Medicaid coverage or tax credits to pay the premiums.

The legislation would create exchanges on which small businesses and people who buy their own coverage directly from insurers could choose from an array of private plans that would compete for their business. It would also require insurance companies to accept all applicants, even those with a pre-existing condition. And it would make a start at reforming the medical care system to improve quality and lower costs.

46 MILLION AND RISING: If nothing is done, the number of uninsured people — 46 million in 2008 — is sure to spike upward as rising medical costs and soaring premiums make policies less affordable and employers continue to drop coverage to save money.

The Congressional Budget Office projects 54 million uninsured people in 2019; the actuary for the federal government’s Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services projects 57 million.

It should be no surprise that people without insurance often postpone needed care, and many get much sicker as a result. That is morally unsustainable. It is also fiscally unsustainable for safety net hospitals — which foist much of the cost on the American taxpayer when the uninsured end up in the emergency room. As the number of uninsured rises, that bill will rise.

The Senate’s reform bill would reduce the number of uninsured by an estimated 31 million in 2019. The Republicans’ paltry proposals would cut the number by only three million.

BUT I HAVE INSURANCE: While most Americans have insurance, many pay exorbitant rates because they have no bargaining power with insurers.

That includes many of the tens of millions who buy their own insurance — the unemployed, the self-employed, and those whose employers do not offer insurance. The recently announced plan by Anthem Blue Cross in California to raise annual premiums by 35 to 39 percent for nearly a quarter of its individual subscribers is a chilling harbinger of what is to come if reform fails.

There are another 48 million people who work in relatively small firms that often cannot get the better rates of large-group coverage. All of these groups should be able to get a better deal if they can buy their insurance through new, competitive exchanges.

If current trends continue, the number of underinsured Americans — those who have coverage too skimpy to pay substantial medical bills or protect them from high out-of-pocket spending — will also rise from an estimated 25 million in 2007 to 35 million in 2011, according to the Commonwealth Fund, a respected research organization.

That will increase the risk that this group will forgo needed care and will expose many more of them to potential bankruptcy if they cannot pay huge medical bills. Some 72 million adults currently have medical debt or problems paying their bills even though most of them have insurance. Reform would help them by setting minimum standards of coverage and providing subsidies to tens of millions of low- and middle-income people to help pay their premiums.

BUT I LIKE MY INSURANCE: Most Americans get their insurance through large companies, with large group bargaining power. While they complain about premiums and paperwork, most seem satisfied with their coverage.

For them the real fear is what happens if they lose their jobs or decide to change jobs. Will they be shut out of coverage because of a pre-existing condition or forced to pay high rates to buy their own insurance?

For this group, the real advantage of reform is security. If they get laid off, decide to be self-employed or switch to a smaller employer that offers no insurance, they will still be guaranteed coverage — even if they are a cancer survivor or have heart trouble or any other pre-existing condition. And they will be able to buy insurance on the exchanges.

I’M JUST WORRIED ABOUT COSTS: You should be. The cost of medical care is rising far faster than wages or inflation. And despite all of the talk about reform “bending the curve,” no one is yet sure how to do that.

Many reforms that people instinctively believe should cut costs — computerization of medical records, paying doctors for quality not quantity of services, and prevention programs to promote healthy living and head off costly illnesses — cannot yet be shown to lower costs.

Pending reform legislation, specifically the Senate bill, would launch an array of pilot projects to test reforms in delivering and paying for care. It would also create a special board to accelerate the adoption of anything that seemed to work. That seems a reasonable way to go and a lot better than standing by as costs continue to spiral out of control. The Republicans’ proposals — including their call to cap malpractice awards — would make only a small dent in the problem.

WHAT ABOUT THE DEFICIT?: Republican critics of health care reform have done an especially good job of frightening Americans with their talk of bankrupting the Treasury. The truth of the matter is that the pending reform legislation has been designed to generate enough revenue and savings to more than offset the substantial cost of expanding Medicaid and providing subsidies to the middle class.

The Congressional Budget Office estimated that the Senate bill would reduce deficits over the first 10 years by $132 billion and even more in the second decade.

What critics certainly do not talk about is what happens to the deficit if Medicare costs continue their relentless rise. That is something that should keep Americans up at night.

The pending reforms would cut the growth in Medicare spending per beneficiary in half — from 4 percent a year to 2 percent — by demanding productivity savings from Medicare providers and cutting unjustified subsidies to the private plans in Medicare.

There is some skepticism that Congress will stick to its guns if health care providers say they cannot survive on the reduced rations. But Congress has stood by most previous Medicare cuts (physicians excepted) and should have its spine stiffened by new pay-go rules requiring that any Medicare increases be offset by other savings or taxes.

If reform is defeated, it seems likely that most of the proposed experiments designed to cut costs — first within Medicare and then throughout the rest of the health care system — will die as well. The legislation needs to be passed to establish a structure to force continuing improvement over the years. That is the best chance of restraining soaring medical costs that threaten the solvency of families, businesses and the federal government.

Any change as big as this is bound to cause anxiety. Republicans have happily fanned those fears with talk of “dangerous experiments” on the “best health care system in the world.” The fact is that the health care system is broken for far too many Americans. And the country cannot afford the status quo.


This editorial is a part of a comprehensive examination of the debate over health care reform. You can read all of these editorials at: Select Editorials on Health Care - The New York Times.
 
CBO Score On Health Care Bill Released: Boosts Democrats' Hopes Of Passing Reform
CBO Score On Health Care Bill Released: Boosts Democrats' Hopes Of Passing Reform

Comprehensive health care reform will cost the federal government $940 billion over a ten-year period, but will increase revenue and cut other costs by a greater amount, leading to a reduction of $130 billion in the federal deficit over the same period, according to an analysis by the Congressional Budget Office, a Democratic source tells HuffPost. It will cut the deficit by $1.2 trillion over the next ten years.

The source said it also extends Medicare's solvency by at least 9 years and reduces the rate of its growth by 1.4 percent, while closing the doughnut hole for seniors, meaning there will no longer be a gap in coverage of medication. The CBO also estimated it would extend coverage to 32 million additional people.

The CBO score is the last piece House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) was waiting on before putting the puzzle together on the House floor. A contingent of Blue Dogs has been holding out support, insisting that the bill be fully paid for and not increase the deficit. The numbers give a major boost to Pelosi and her leadership team, which can now begin the whip count in earnest and can specifically point to the cost savings.

With the CBO score released, the Democratic whip team has a specific, thoroughly-analyzed bill to show to undeclared members who can no longer claim they are "waiting to see the language." Pelosi has very little room for error and needs to move nearly every undecided voter to a solid "yes."

Since the House last passed legislation in November, a significant number of those who opposed it have since announced their retirements, relieving them of some political pressure to oppose the bill. Pelosi may end up drawing on those exiting members for a cushion of support.

The reconciliation package that the CBO analyzed makes slight changes to the underlying bill. Subsidies for the uninsured to purchase insurance are increased and more funding is dedicated to community health centers. The excise tax on insurance premiums is scaled back so that it hits few families. The bill also demands a higher commitment from drugmakers, aiming to close the so-called "doughnut hole" -- the time that seniors must pay full price for medication. The pharmaceutical lobby has signed off on the increased commitment and will be running ads in Democratic districts in support of reform.

The reconciliation package, because of budget rules that limit its policy scope, does not deal with two contentious social issues: abortion or immigration. Anti-choice Democrats are threatening to kill the entire project over the abortion language in the Senate bill and Congressional Hispanic Caucus members are rebelling because of its draconian immigration provisions. The Senate language bars federal funds from paying for abortion, but doesn't go far enough, according to some Democrats. Undocumented workers would be barred from purchasing insurance -- even with their own money -- from private companies which operate within exchanges set up by reform.

The reconciliation package is headed for a Rules Committee vote on Thursday with a vote in the full House to follow. But before the House votes, it will require the commitment of 50-plus members of the Senate to agree to pass the identical bill. A Democratic Senator told HuffPost Tuesday night that Senate leadership had yet to begin whipping support for the bill because the language hadn't been finalized. Now it's been finalized.

The reform effort was jolted forward Wednesday morning, when Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio), who was a firm no as of last week, announced that he would back the bill.

"This is a defining moment for whether or not we'll have any opportunity to move off square one on the issue of health care. And so even though I don't like the bill, I've made a decision to support it in the hopes that we can move towards a more comprehensive approach once this legislation is done," he said. "If I can vote for this bill, there's not many people who shouldn't be able to support it."

Anti-choice Democrats have begun to back away from their certain opposition over the last several days. Rep. Jim Oberstar (D-Minn.) has pledged to back the bill and Rep. Marcy Kaptur (D-Ohio), who opposes abortion rights, said on Tuesday evening that she is still considering voting for it. "That is one of the factors," she said of the Senate's abortion restrictions. "It is not the only factor."

It's not clear, though, what Kaptur's concern is. At one point Tuesday, she said that she didn't like the Senate language because it went too far beyond existing restrictions on federal funding of abortion. "The abortion issue is an issue for me in that I don't want to go beyond existing law," she said. "I view what was done in the Senate as going beyond existing law."

But at other times, she said that the Senate bill did not adequately ensure that federal money would not be spent on abortion and also cited federally-funded community health centers as a potential way such money could pay for abortions. HuffPost pointed out to her that such centers do not perform abortions. "Read the language," she insisted.

HuffPost asked Kaptur what the difference is between a federal subsidy of a private COBRA health care plan that covers abortion and a federal subsidy of a private plan under the proposed health care reform. In both cases, a consumer uses a mix of personal and federal money to purchase a private plan.

"Those are private choices [made by COBRA consumers] and the private plans that are out there, for instance federal health plans that we have: We've handled that separately. They can purchase it separately. They can purchase it separately. Keep the line as firm in the sand as you can and that makes me more comfortable," she said.

HuffPost noted that Kaptur had essentially just described the provisions of the Senate bill, which requires consumers to write separate, personal checks for abortion coverage. "I don't think what I've read in the Senate language is that," she said.

Kaptur, a social liberal, has a number of other concerns she said, including the absence of a public option. "When you take out the public option, when you take out the ability to negotiate prescription drugs, when you take out McCarran-Ferguson, when you take out the provision that I authored in the House in Title I to create regional, not-for-profit purchasing pools, where you can have hundreds of thousands of people aggregate and negotiate together on behalf of whatever their insurance plans are, you take the guts of that out."
 
I agree, what pisses me off is 2700 pages of what?? A program to give insurance to 30 million more people. Bull!!! It does nothing to fix health care or ANY other problem, like you said. It pisses me off, the free loaders get enough, now I HAVE to provide there health insurance as well, o wait, that's right pay higher premiums, and my family small business needs to offer more expensive health insurance and provide proof or we'll be taxed. TOTAL BS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Here is an inside report that I got from a irs agent

THE ARTICLE BELOW, AND ATTACHED HOUSE.GOV ARTICLE IS JUST 1% OF PROBLEMS AND LOSS OF FREEDOM TO COME WITH THIS BILL. ANY "LAW" THAT IS 2700 PAGES IS NOT SIMPLY TO PUT A FEW MANDATES ON INSURANCE COMPANIES - NO, THIS 2700 PAGE LAW IS THE STRUCTURE THAT CHANGES AMERICA AND SPITS ON OUR CONSTITUTION. JUST READ THE BILL OR DO SOME RESEARCH ABOUT WHAT'S IN THERE.

"IRS Explosion: 16,500 More Agents Needed to Enforce ObamaCare

Largest expansion since WWII means more intrusion into American lives

Washington, D.C. - The Internal Revenue Service will see its largest expansion since withholding taxes were enacted during WWII to enforce the glut of new tax mandates and penalties included in the Democrats’ latest health care plan.

A new analysis by the Joint Economic Committee and the House Ways & Means Committee minority staff estimates up to 16,500 new IRS personnel will be needed to collect, examine and audit new tax information mandated on families and small businesses in the ‘reconciliation’ bill being taken up by the U.S. House of Representatives this weekend.

“When most people think of health care reform they think of more doctors exams, not more IRS exams,” says U.S. Congressman Kevin Brady, the top House Republican on the Joint Economic Committee. “Isn’t the federal government already intruding enough into our lives? We need thousands of new doctors and nurses in America, not thousands more IRS agents.”

Scores of new federal mandates and fifteen different tax increases totaling $400 billion are imposed under the Democratic House bill. In addition to more complicated tax returns, families and small businesses will be forced to reveal further tax information to the IRS, provide proof of ‘government approved’ health care and submit detailed sales information to comply with new excise taxes.

http://www.house.gov/apps/list/press/tx08_brady/irs_power_report.pdf



I would be all for Health care reform if it didn't sound so much as socialized welfare for the masses. Granted, most Medicaid recipients have better benefits then a pretty good percentage of regular insured people. I mean what better insurance could you have where you see a doctor and if he orders a test that isn't covered that patient cannot be billed for the balance. Hell, when I worked in a pharmacy these people (and I say it like that because most did not need to be on Medicaid) would object to paying a 50 cent copay for a months worth of medication. You know what I pay for a month of medication (IF it is on the list of approvalable drugs) $20! So why should I pay more as a working member of society as opposed to someone who can make it by as a professional freeloader on food stamps and Medicaid. And don't get me wrong, I am not making this comment towards people who actually need food stamps and Medicaid, just the hundreds of thousands who take advantage of the system and I have to pay for it while yet again, they contribute nothing at all.
So that's my rant. You want to fix Health care go ahead, but make it fare for everyone. Not just a system where freeloaders get more benefits. You need a job??? Someone is ALWAYS hiring! And if you don't have a job, you are not above the qualifications because if you were then you wouldn't be on unemployment! (yep, I'm sure that one struck a vein!) :D

This is the biggest piece of shit to come out of Washington ever!!

What will be nice is when we kick those biggest pieces of shit OUT OF WASHINTON FOREVER!!!!! Come November, its coming!!!!
 
received this letter from Congressman Harry Mitchell. He is rep from my district.

For more than three years, since being sworn into office in 2007, I've heard
from hundreds of doctors, patients, health care professionals, seniors,
students, small business owners, and thousands of concerned Arizona families
representing views both for and against reform.

After careful consideration and over a year of debate, studying bills, and
listening to Arizonans, one thing had been made clear: health care costs are
hurting families, burdening small businesses, weighing down our economy and
slowing the recovery.

For too long, the problem has grown worse, and instead of working together
to reform a broken system, folks in Washington have used this issue to score
political points. Both parties have been guilty of this. But playing it safe
politically, which some have chosen to do, is why big problems - like health
care and immigration reform - have taken decades to address in Congress.

According to Kaiser Health News, a nonprofit news organization committed to
in-depth coverage of health care policy and politics, some key provisions
that would go into effect in the first year include:

*
Ban insurance companies from denying coverage to children with
pre-existing conditions.
*
Ban insurance companies from dropping people from their coverage
when they get sick.
*
Create an interim high-risk pool to provide immediate access to
people who lack coverage due to pre-existing conditions.
*
Allow young people to stay on their parents' insurance policy until
they are 26 years old.
*
Provide a $250 rebate to Medicare beneficiaries who hit the donut
hole in 2010.
*
Provide tax credits for small businesses that will help make current
coverage more affordable.
*
Create a temporary program that helps employers offset costs for
providing coverage for early retirees age 55-64.
*
Investment in training programs to increase the number of primary
care doctors, nurses and public health professionals.

Alternatively, there are organizations that have spent millions of dollars
to spread patently false statements and rhetoric that have been meant to
distract you and distort what reform really means and how it affects us. Let
me be clear about what this legislation will and will not do:

*
It will prohibit insurance companies from denying coverage based on
pre-existing conditions and prevent them from dropping your coverage if you
get sick.

*
It will not eliminate private insurance or kick anyone off
of their current insurance.

*
It will set up a free market health insurance exchange for more
competition and allow private insurance purchases across state lines

*
It will not dismantle the private insurance industry.

*
It will strengthen Medicare for 84,000 residents in the 5th
district, close the prescription drug donut hole for seniors and provide
coverage for preventative care. It has also been endorsed by AARP.

*
As someone over 65 and on Medicare myself, I would not
support a plan that weakened Medicare.

* It will help small businesses with tax credits to help cover costs
of providing insurance so they can retain talent and continue to be
competitive. It will also allow small businesses to band together and 'pool'
their purchasing power to negotiate better insurance rates.

* It will not unduly burden small businesses.

*
Preserve TRICARE coverage for our nation's veterans and military
families.

* It will not force military families and veterans to change
or acquire additional coverage.

*
It will reduce Arizona's Medicaid costs by treating Arizona
equitably by providing assistance in covering individuals enrolled in
AHCCCS. It also removes special deals like the so-called 'Cornhusker
Kickback' that treated states unfairly.

*
It will not have devastating effects on Arizona's economy
and state budget which were in dire shape before this legislation and still
would be without it.

*
According to the Congressional Budget Office, which both Republicans
and Democrats rely on as the non-partisan budget referee, it will reduce the
deficit by $138 billion in the first 10 years and $1.2 trillion in the
following 10 years because its provisions work to bend health care costs
over time.

*
It will not add to the nation's deficit.

*
It will make health insurance more accessible and affordable for
individuals and small businesses.

*
It does not allow federal dollars to fund abortion or
provide coverage for illegal immigrants.

I encourage you to seek out more independent sources and news organizations
that provide non-partisan, fact-check sites to confirm or refute claims that
have been made throughout the health care debate.

I know some of you will have honest differences of opinion on this important
issue. While I understand that this package is not perfect - no legislation
ever is - I believe that doing nothing, maintaining the status quo is not
only irresponsible, it's also fiscally unsustainable.
 
Cost May Still Pose Insurmountable Barrier To Health Coverage For Many.

On the front of its Science Times section, the New York Times (4/20, D1, Rabin - Those Meant to Benefit From Health Law Still Face Hurdles - NYTimes.com) reports, "According to the Congressional Budget Office, some 32 million more Americans will have insurance by 2019 under the new [healthcare] law, about half of whom will be buying health insurance on the individual market for the first time (the other half will be covered for the first time under Medicaid, which is being expanded to include more of the poor)." Yet, some experts are "skeptical that so many uninsured people would actually start buying insurance." Data show that most uninsured people "earn less than 200 percent of the federal poverty level," and 60% cite price as the main barrier to obtaining health coverage. Still, officials say that the new law includes subsidies which will help to offset the cost of health insurance.

Middle-Income Americans Losing Health Insurance Faster Than Others. The New York Times (4/19, Andrews - The Squeeze on the Middle Class - Prescriptions Blog - NYTimes.com) "Prescriptions" blog reported, "A combination of rising health insurance premiums and falling wages has hit middle-income people especially hard, causing them to lose health insurance coverage faster than workers both poorer and richer than they are," according to data released by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. "Over the 10-year period between 1999 and 2008, more than two million people with incomes from 200 to 399 percent of the federal poverty level (roughly $44,000 to $88,000 for a family of four), became uninsured -- an increase of 2.4 percentage points to 12.9 million people." That "represents an uninsurance rate of 16.2 percent," whereas "the 5.9 million people with incomes at or greater than 400 percent of poverty experienced an increase in uninsurance of one percentage point, to 5.8 percent in 2008."
 
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